If THK CITIZEN, FRIDAY, MARCH 11, HMO. THE CITIZEN PORURIIF.n KVEnY WF.IlNF.SnAY AND FRIDAY IIV THK CITt.KN rUHMBllINO COMPANY. fntered as scetmil-rlnss tiintlpr. nt the. iot olllce. lloncsdalo. Pa. suuscription ?i.r.o R. n. IIAllDKNHKItOH. PRESIDENT W. V. WOOD. - MANAGER AND SECY niRtxTons: o. n. dorfmnokii. m. h. ai.i.en. UKNllY WILSON. V. II. IIAMIKNIIKROH. w. w. voou. FRIDAY, MARCH 11, HHO. The more you trouble trouble the more trouble will trouble you. To be free Is to have the power to live nbovc adversity while In the midst of adversity. Never run away from trouble. He right, strong, harmonious and mas terful whore you are. and trouble will soon run away from you. President Tnft Is beginning to realize that there is more truth than poetry In the saying that "no body loves a fat man." Civil suits have been Instituted against every olllelal who In any way had connection with the erec tion or furnishing of the capitol building at Harrisburg with the ex ception of Govs. Stone and Penny packer. Included in the suits are all the contractors, architects aud the bondsmen for the ofllclals. Continue to feel mean, ugly, mis erable or disgusted, and you will Anally look these things. Continue to feel disagreeable every hour for a year, or even less, and you will not only look disagreeable, but you will become I personally repulsive. These are well-known facts; but the law works both wnys. Continue to feel within yourself all those quali ties that naturally attract admira tion, and you will become so attrac tive, first in your nature and then also in your personality, that you will attract the admiration of every person you meet. Continue to feel any desirable quality, and that qual ity, will become a living power in your nature. Later it will express Itself in your personality, and you will look what you feel. This feel ing, however, must bo continuous; It must become habitual and subcon scious, and must be thoroughly alive evory hour. Representative Macon, of Georgia, has nominated Commodore Peary for membership In the " Ananias Club," claiming that his right to membership is Indisputable and can be substantiated by his own record of tho distance which he traveled after leaving Capt. Hartlett, in his final dash to the pole. While with Capt. Bartlett and a strong support ing party, he only averaged 9.0C miles a day. After leaving Hartlett and with no white man as a witness, he claims to have travelled an aver age of 2CVi miles per day. The Commodore, in a letter to General Greely. written in 1904, claims that 7.4 miles a day would be a good average. Edward Payson Weston, tho greatest walker in the world, a trained athlete, unencumbered with any load, traveling over smooth graded roads, paved streets, etc., did not average over 40 miles a day In his Journey from Boston to San FranclBco. Kvldcntly tho Intense cold of tho North solidifies human effort to bo truthful, to such nil ex tent that tho circulation of thnt vir tue is jjrcatly destroyed in tiiQ souls of men who nro socking for u fume that can ho retailed out nt so much per Iecturo on tho platform or so much n word in u nniKu.im. One of Oumas Sentences. The prize for tlio .unnt sentence ever written may fairly be awarded to tho elder Dumas,, who probably holds a further record for fertility of production, in Jio t,evuiith of the 29 volumes which compose the "Impres sions do Voyage, more a a sentenco describing Uenvenuto Cellini which fills three pages, or lob lines, averag ing 45 letters apiece. Tho sentence Is broken by 08 commas and CO semi colons, but as it contains 195 verbs and Vl'l proper nr.mes. tht reader is somewhat bewildered before the end is reacueu An Unreasonable Command. An Irisn cuptulu inspecting his com pany uotleed taut one ot the soldiers had iieglected U wash either the back of his neck or his eats. "Hi, you," he called to him "you haven't washed yourself at the back! UlKht-about-faco nnd look at yoursoli!" Woman. A Japanese suyiug runs: "Woman is an unmanageable creature; flatter her, sho is elated; thrash her, she weepetu; kill her, her spirit haunts you." No would suggest that tho best remedy u to lore her, - London News. IS The following romnnco wns related In n speech In the House tho other dny by Representative Kolfor of Ohio, who, 27 years ngo, was Speaker of tho House. "I know a man In tho army," ho said, "who ought to bo a brigadier general. Ho served In tho Civil wnr when almost a child. He fought at the ago of twelve and ho was small for his age. After tho war he want ed to go to West Point. Ho went to President Grnnt, who told him ho would appoint him as soon ns he was old enough and felt prepared to take the examinations. Later on, tho President nominated him ns a cadet. The doctors made short work of him. They rejected the man because ho wns too short, did not weigh enough nnd knew nothing about mathemat ics and literature. That is tho way he went through West Point. Tho young man returned to Washington. He called on President Grant and told h 1 in how ho had failed and how sorry ho wns to havo to go home and find a way of making a living outside of the nrmy. Ho thanked the President for his appointment. Grant, In his cold, stern way, told the ambitious young man that ho was glad he had failed. That was not very consoling to tho broken-hearted, patriotic soldier boy. President Grant wrote something on a card, put it in an envelope nnd nsked the I young man to carry it to tho War Department nnd hand it to the Sec i retary of War. He did so and the Secretary became very polite to him, asked Him to take a seat, paid him great respect and immediately made out an appointment for him as a second lieutenant in the Army of the United States. He Is to-day senior colonel in the quartermaster de partment of the United States Army i John L. Clem." Aguinaldo is living the life of a country gentleman on a small estate Just outside of Cavlte. He takes no part whatever in the politics of his country. From the moment of his capture Aguinaldo took tho position that it would be Improper for him to express any opinion whatsoever re garding tho rule of his country by Americans. So far as is known he has not commented in anyway, either favorably or adversely upon the ad ministration of the white man. "For a couple of years," said Man uel L. Quezon, the Philippine Com missioner to Congress. "I lived with AgulnaldG In his home. We were on ! the most intimate terms. Remark-1 able as it may seem, I have not heard him make any comment whatever about the change in the government of the Islands. No one has been able to trap him into any kind of an ad mission. If he is asked whether he; thinks conditions in the Islands have improved under the adminis tration of the American, ho will re ply: " "1 am very busy with my farm ing.' " "Whether he approves or con demns the new order of things no body knows. Still he seems to be contented. Once or twice a year he I is inVlted to dine with tho gover-1 nor general. Ho always accepts these invitations and seems to enjoy I himself. He maintains an air of dignity and composure at all times and lias the respect of every one." ' Secretary Knox may soon receive an Increase in pay, not that the high cost- of living is worrying him greatly, but simply because ho will soon be eligible for a raise In sal ary. Mr. Knox, although tho prem ier of the Taft administration, re ceives only 18,000 a year, while all the other members of tho Cabinet are paid at the rate of $1,000 a month. A constitutional limitation brought about the reduction In the pay of Mr. Knox and for a time threatened to keep him out of 'the Cabinet nltogethor. Mr. Knox was a Senator when the pay of Cabinet officers was increas ed from J8.000 to 12,000. The Constitution provides that no mem ber of Congress shall bo appointed to a position, the emoluments of which shall have been Increased during the term for which ho is elected. Mr. Knox's term as Sena tor would have expired on March 4, 1911. After that date there will ho no constitutional objection to his receiving tho pay of other Cabinet olilccrs. In due time his salnry will bo Increased. James II. G:rfloUl has been In Washington for a couple of weoks, but during all that period he has not found tlmo to call nt the Whlto House. Mr. Garflold is the house guest of Gilford Plnchot. Ho is aid ing tho latter In the preparation of his case before the Congressional Investigating Committee, and later on may tako tho stand himsolf, Mr. Garflold worked hard to elect Mr. Taft as President. Ho made campaign speeches throughout tho country. Ho spoko in Brooklyn and pleased a largo audience by a re cital of what Mr. Roosevelt had ac complished and how tho good work would bo continued under Mr. Taft. Mr. Garfield had an idea that ho might bo kept as Secretary of tho Interior In tho Taft administration. Mr. Roosevolt had said something to the effect that the olcctlon of Taft would mean the continuation of "the same policies, the same office holders and everything." Mr. Hal Unger was chosen to take Mr. Gar field's place. WHAT GOING AT WASHINGTON Now Mr. Garflold is sitting up lata nt night with Mr. I'lnchot, aid ing In tho campaign to pull doton Mr Ualllngor. , THK WOMAN' IN THK CASH. It takes mlsfortuno to show tho stuff of which men and women aro made, and stress of circumstance ofttliucs develops heroism In unex pected qunrt,crs. Wo nro prono to look upon the woman crndlcd In lux ury ns a spineless creature, but the plucky fight which Mrs. C. W. Morse is mnklng for her husbnnd's liberty which Ada Patterson tells all about In Human Life for March will alter tills opinion. At the beginning of the bnnkcr's troubles Mrs. Morse wns not so large a figure on the horizon of his hopes not until nfter ho had been in the Tombs for some months nnd sho had performed a feat which his attorney had declared to be Impossible. When the nvalancho of ruin enme, nnd all the glittering prizes of life had seemingly slipped from her grasp, the gold of her character and her strength nnd resourcefulness came to the surface, and her hus band in his dreary cell Is building his hopes on the unique nnd far reaching work that she is directing from her little office In Wall street. Tho story also discloses a bathing mystery in the life of this womnn. In connection with which one of Now York's shnrpest lawyers was given a vacation, at the city's expense, nt Hlackwell's Island. Altogether her life lins boon a strange mosaic of light nnd shadow, of splendor and despair. If makes an interesting story. ' WILL INTEREST EVERY JUSTICE OF PEACE "In ItelutiiiK to Surety of the Peace and Defining the Procedure in Such Cases." (Every surety peace case that came up before the last session of the Lackawanna county courts was dis missed by the court for non-compliance with the Act of 1909). Commonwealth vs. Fred Young. In the Court of Quarter Sessions of Wayne County. No. 1G, Jan. Ses sions, 1910. Surety of the Peace. This case comes before the court upon a motion to quash tho transcript for the reason that it does not show that the provisions of tho Act of Assembly approved March IS, 1909, "relating to surety of the peace and defining the procedure in such cases," were complied with. Prior to this act, surety of the peace was demandable of right . before a Justice of the Peace by any Individual who thought him self In danger of being hurt in person or estate and would make the necessary oath, and the Jus tice's only duty and authority was to bind the defendant, with one sufficient security, to appear at the next sessions. See Com monwealth vs. Snyder, 13 Pa. County Court Reports, page 000. Also Sardo v. Crovt, C J. of P. 74 ( 1905), Doty, P. J. The Act of 1909, however, has made a complete and radical change in tho practice relating to surety of the peace. At last term of court, we dismissed the case of Commonwealth vs. Kieg ler, a surety of the peace case, for the reason that the transcript did not show that the Act of 1909 had been complied with, and that Justices of the Peace may understand what transcripts in surety of the peace eases In the future must show, we write this opinion. Formerly surety of the peace was subject to every great abuse and entailed great expense upon the county and upon tho parties concerned and was productive of great and needless ill feeling. The Act of 1909 recognizes this abuse in the preamble, which is as follows: "Whereas, The oatli which warrants the arrest of one who shall' threaten the person of an other, and his binding over to the next term of tho quarter sessions court and to keep tho peace In tho meantime, is often hastily and thoughtlessly made; and great costs unjustly put upon the several counties of the Common wealth by having many trivial cases sont to court, therefore to remedy tills evil ." etc. Under this Act, the transcript of the Justice should show, as provided by Section three, that ho afforded an opportunity and suggested to tho parties tho pro priety of compromising their differences boforo entering Into a hearing, and tho transcript should nlso show, that before uny hear ing was had tho Justice was un nblo to havo tho parties com promise their differences, though tho fact might bo Implied if ho had afforded them tho opportun ity nnd suggestion for thnt pur pose The transcript should nlso Bhow, as provided by section one, that tho JuBtlco, boforo ho binds any one over to tho next Quarter Ses sions to keep tho peace upon the oath of another, has entored in to a full hearing nnd investiga tion of the facts, and nlso should show that evldenco was produced, satisfactory to him, that tho prosecutor's or prosecutrix's dan ger of being hurt in body or es tate is actual and that the threats woro made by tho defendant mal iciously and with latent to do harm. To bo satisfied upon this point, ho should henr tho evidence of tho prosecutor nnd his wit nesses nnd nlso should hear tho evidence of the defendant If ho desires to bo henrd. Ho Is not obliged to tako the evidence of tho prosecutor nnd his witnesses ns of verity, but ho must find that tho complaint was miftlo for due causo and thnt the danger of be ing hurt In body or estate Is act ual and genuine, not merely man ufactured for tho occasion, nnd this must ho determined by him under all the evidence. While the transcript should show the foreolng facts, It need not, how ever, show tho evidence by which they nrc suhstnntlnted. See Com monwealth vs. Coxson, IS Dist. R. 890. Section two of tills Act pro vides, "In nil rases where tho evldenco does not show that the threats were maliciously niado by the defendant nnd with intent to do harm and that tho prosecutor is actually in danger of being hurt In body or estate. It shall bo the duty of the Justice to dis charge tho defendant and then determine by whom the costs should.be paid; and In determin ing tho question of the payment of tho costs he may find, that the prosecutor pay them all, that the defendant pay them all, or that the prosecutor and defendant pay them In equnl or unequal pro portions; and, In default of pay ment, may commit the person or persons adjudged to pay tho costs to the county jail until they are paid, or until such person is discharged according to law. We think, by studying the Act Itself and following the rules herein laid down, the transcripts which may he returned to the Court will be sustained, and that after such hearing and investiga tion as the Act of Assembly di rects, few cases will be sent to court, as experience lias shown that there is little need for sure ty of the peace when there has been sufficient time for the tem per of the parties concerned to subside, and there are very few cases where the prosecutor is in any real danger of being hurt in body or estate. The record In this case does not comply in any respect with the Act of 1909 and therefore the executions are sustained and the proceedings dismissed, and as the practice under this Act is new, we direct that tho officers' costs, amounting to $5.39, and the fees of the Clerk of the Court, amount ing to ?2.50, bo paid by the coun ty, and no other fees or costs be taxed. By THE COURT. LO, THE POOH KRITOIl. Verily the life of a country editor is a path of thorns. His bread is promises nnd his meat is disappointment. His creditors chase him by day and old Satan grinneth at him in his dreams by night. One subscription is wood, nnd be hold it Is rotten and soggy and of short measure. Ho whoopeth up the country poli tician who gets elected and kuow eth him no more. Ho puffeth the church fair gratis and then attendeth it and payeth his quarter and receiveth his two oysters. He boomcth his town and all things therein and yet receiveth no sup port, and Is a prophet without honor in his own country. Two young people marry and he giveth them a great puff; they goeth to housekeeping and takcth not his paper. Yea he is bowed down with woe and ills days aro full of grief and trouble nnd vexation of spirit. But sorrow endureth only for a night and joy cometh in tho morn ing. Ho ploddeth along and endureth in patience, and It is written that he will receive his reward at Judg ment. TO CALIFORNIA and PACIFIC COAST POINTS Vin Erie Railroad. Ask Ticket Agent for particulars. Iwto Ap. 9. Thoro Is more Catarrh in this sec tion of the country than ull other diseases put together, and until the Inst fow years was supposed to be Incurablo. For a groat many years doctors pronounced It a locnl disease and prescribed local remedies, nnd by constantly fnlling to cure with local treatment, pronounced it Incurablo. Science has proven catarrh to bo a constitutional dlBenso and therefore requires constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J. Chenoy & Co., Toledo, Ohio, Is tho only constitutional cure on tho market. It Is taken Internally In doses from 10 drops to a tcaspoonful. It acts directly on the blood and muc ous surfaces of tho systoin. They offer ono hundred dollars for any case It falls to cure. Send for circulars and testimonials. Address: F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, Ohio. Sold by Druggists, 75c. Take Hall's Family Pills for con stipation. ADDS IX THK CITIZEN aiavays nnixa results INSPECTOR SEIZES CATTLE. Ill-ought Over From (inlllcc, Tills County, Considerable excitement wns created in Cnlllcoon last week by tho selzuro of alleged diseased cattle by a State Inspector. Tho populntlon here wns about evenly divided ns to whether tho cat tle were diseased or not; and yet, no one seemed to be absolutely sure about it not even the Inspector himsolf, for ho seized the cattle and then concluded ho wns wrong nnd let them go. Not since the Game Wnrdons came hero nnd put a crimp in the eel mar ket has there been' so much street gossip and palaver about n local affair. John Walker, of Galilee, owns a largo dairy, nnd sometime ngo some of his cattlo apparently contracted a contagious disease. Ho separated tho Infected cows from tho herd nnd doctored them for somo time, but without much success, according to his belief. They gradually grew worse and, in consideration of the fact thnt he really believed that they were dis eased, ho decided to sell them for whntover purpose they could be used. Ho accordingly sought buyers, and V. P. ("Tine") Scheidell. of Jeffer sonvillo, made him the best offer, ?22 per head for twelve well-bred Holstlno cows. Mr. Walker claim ed that he sold the cows as diseased cattle. According to reports of local "ex ports," some of tho cows, were eas ily worth $60 a head, providing they woro In good health. On Wednesday Scheidell drove the cattle from the Walker farm to the Delaware House stables, preparatory to shipping them to the abattoir in Jersey City. In the meantime State Inspector Fulton, a former Sheriff, who runs a store at Wurtsboro, happen ed on the scene and, claiming that the cattlo were diseased, took charge of them. It is said that Inspector Fulton came hero to look into a bob veal case, but the wise ones say that ho was informed that these cattle were :::::;:!:j;:::tuj:KJtt::::a::::n::::nKr::::r:::::;m::jt:::;j:::n E PRETTY Easter ON SALE AT E ER W. 11. HOLMES, PitEstDK.vr. A. T. SEA RLE, Vice Rues. We want you to understand the reasons of UiIh -THU- WAYNE COUNTY SAVINGS BANK HONESDALB, PA., II AS A CAPITAL OP $100,000.00 AND SURPLUS AND PROFITS OP - :)!)4,000.0C .MAKING ALTOGETHER - - 494.000.00 EVERY DOLLAR of which must be lost before any depositor can lose a PENNY. It has conducted a growing and successful business for over U3 years, serving an increasing number of customers with lldeolity nnd satisfaction. Its cash funds nro protected by MODERN STEEL VAULTS. All ot these Unties, coupled with conservative manai:ement. insured by the CAREFUL PERSONAL ATTENTION constantly t'lven the flank's affaire by n notiilily able Hoard of Directors assures the patrons of that SUPREME SAFETY wlilrli Is tho prime essential ot a food Hunk. Total Assets, 8y DEPOSITS MAY HE -DIRECTORS-CRAB. J. SMITH. It. J. CONGER. W V. SUYDAM. W. TI. IIOI.MBI A. T. SKAKLK T. 1J. CLARK about to bo brought Into this Stato and that ho came hero for tho pur pose of seizing them, If thoy wore diseased. He gave tho cattlo a thorough ex amination and seemed to be about as much at sea In regard to the mat ter ns the others; but on Thursday ho decided to let Scheidell ship them to Jersey City nnd there ho would havo tho government Inspector pass on them. Tho cows wore shipped, but up to the time of going to press wo havo been unable to lenrn what decision tho government Inspector rendered Sullivan County News. TAKE THE CITIZEN' THIS YEAR at the MAPLE CITY GREEN HOUSES. Come and see the beautiful beds of Car nations now in full bloom. SUITS FOR "( & GO'S II. S. SALMON, Casiiieu V. J. WARD. Ass't Cashier for the ABSOLUTE SECURITY Rank. $2,886,000.00 MADE 11 Y MAIL. TBI V P. KIMI1LK H 3. SALMON lifcljlsflf